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Script
and Research: Sunil Shanbag, Swati Dandekar
Cinematography: K U Mohanan
Production Manager: Nandu Nimbalkar
Sound: Suresh Rajamani
Edited by: Sanjiv Shah, Jabeen Merchant
Music: Aneesh Pradhan
Produced by: Sunil Shanbag, Arunabh Bhattacharjee, Dr
Lodewicjk Brunt
Directed by: Arunabh Bhattacharjee
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Blessed
by the Plague
is a thought-provoking documentary, shot on digital video,
that puts on record the astounding change in Surat from being
the filthiest city in India to now being its cleanest city.
Produced by Setu Films, a Film and Television Production Company
based in Mumbai and known for their high quality work in fiction,
non-fiction, theatre and live performance art, the film looks
at Surat's successful efforts to convert itself into a clean
and livable place following the plague scare of 1994.
Blessed
by the Plague emerged through the filmmakers' (Director
Arunabh Bhattacharjee and partner and co-producer Sunil Shanbag)
interaction with Dr. Lodewijk Brunt, an urban sociologist
from the University of Amsterdam and a co-producer of the
film. Dr. Brunt studies cities particularly cities in crisis
for e.g. the role of epidemics in shaping cities. He visited
Surat soon after the plague scare and wrote about it extensively
in Europe. Subsequently as the makers and Dr. Brunt followed
the post-plague developments in Surat, they realized there
was a film in this remarkable transformation.
The
title Blessed by the Plague is ironic because it took
the plague scare and the international ostracism that India
faced to make Surat what it is today. In that sense Surat
was truly Blessed by the Plague!
The
Film is basically split into four parts - pre-plague Surat,
the plague and its aftermaths, Surat during commissioner Rao's
tenure and Surat after Rao was transferred and replaced by
a new commissioner. Thus the film looks at apathy, its horrific consequences, the initiation
of change and most importantly the sustaining of this change.
The film looks at the four reasons that caused the plague
- the huge immigrant influx into Surat, the inability of the
city's infrastructure to bear this huge human load, total
apathy and disinterest of the bureaucracy and the flooding
of the city by the River Tapi leaving behind death and disease.
The film shows the horrific aftermath of the flood - dead
animals, industrial sledge, people dead because of all the
filth in the water and then the mysterious disease that killed
more than 50 people. Through Rao's cleanliness drive wherein
he inspired the authorities, took citizens into confidence
and began changing the face of Surat, the film brings out
clearly how transparency in bureaucracy plays a prominent
role in removing the rot in a system. It demonstrates how
an individual and a system can work together and do wonders.
Fortunately the changes initiated by Rao have not fallen by
the wayside as his good work is continued by his successor.
The success story of Surat is perfectly summed up in an interview
with a rag picker who says that they have lost business. No
one throws garbage on the streets of Surat anymore! Today
98% of the garbage in Surat is cleared, much higher than other
Indian cities, which average a woeful 40%.
In
spite of its serious matter, this positive little film is
engrossing and its subject matter brought across in a simple
yet interesting manner. Little touches of humour aside, here
is a film that raises several pertinent questions that you
sit up and think. And think deep. Do we need disasters of
such magnitude for our eyes to open? Must we wait for messiahs
like Rao to bring changes in our cities? While the Bombay
Muncipal Corporation feted Rao two years ago for his work
in Surat, it would do well if they learnt something from him.
Mumbai with its mushrooming slums and an infrastructure that
could collapse anytime could well be the next Surat.
The
film is put together with the help of archival footage from
the local channel, Channel Surat. The channel was born when
a local, Nikhil Madrasi, took video footage of Surat during
the plague. Realizing the potential of the subject, he subsequently
started Channel Surat. When Rao began demolishing of illegal
structures, Channel Surat kept people abreast of the happenings
with its 15-minute news capsules. Today Channel Surat is an
integral part of Surat's life - its watchdog so to say!
Unfortunately
there is no proper network in India to screen documentaries
such as this. Thus th e screenings are usually held for private groups or institutions
and in the festival circuit both in India and abroad. Which
is a pity since films like this need to be seen and learnt
from. Blessed by the Plague was screened at the Mumbai
International Short Film and Documentary Film Festival in
the International Competition section and has had several
private screenings in Mumbai, Pune, Madurai and Trivandrum,
Ernakulam and Calicut in Kerala to overwhelming response.
The Film is also to be shown on the Netherlands Television
Network and is up for selection at prominent International
Documentary Film Festivals. Blessed by the Plague once
again reiterates Setu Films commitment to high quality documentaries.
Their earlier work includes films like Maihaar Raag (1993),
a film on the legacy of Baba Allaudin Khan exploring themes
such as guru-shisya parampara, patronage, sacred space, and
the commitment to the legacy of the founder of a gharana (Maihaar
Raag won the National Award for The Best Non-Feature Film
of 1993), Dandyat Ram Nahin… (There's no Joy left…)
(1995) - A moving account of the Kolis, Bombay's fisherfolk,
original inhabitants of the island, and their precarious existence
on the edge of an ever-growing urban sprawl and an enlightening
T.V. series on parenting, Choti Choti Batein (1998-99)
which was aired on Zee T.V.
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